Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Nov 1961, p. 1

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Join The Drive THOUGHT FOR TODAY Before you flare up at, someone else's fault, take time to count ten -- of your own. he Oshawa Cime Mi. F: To The Community Chest Goal WEATHER REPORT Sunny with cloudy periods to- day and Saturday, warmer, Winds light today, southerly 15 to 25 Saturday. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 90--NO. 261 Authorized as Second Post Office Repartment, Class Mei Ottawe TWENTY PAGES OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1961 ACCRA (Reuters)--As 400,000;ond vehicle with Nkrumah's Ghanaians cheered, Queen Eliz-| wife, Fathia. abeth reviewed a parade of| The review marked the first Ghana's police and armed|time that Ghana's military and forces in huge Black Star|police forces were on parade Square today. with ali Negro officers and non- Preceding the official entour |commissioned officers. : lage into the square was a loud-| The army contingents were in lspeaker truck of President)new ceremonial uniforms with |Nkrumah's Convention People's! red jackets, police in black and |party, which blared out: white uniform, the air force in "Kwame Nkrumah, our greatilight grey and the cavalry re- African leader, and Elizabeth, |splendent in red and green head of the Commonwealth." (tunics with kepi hats and lances. The review was the first pub-| One soldier fainted during the lic engagement of Queen Eliza-|hour-long review. beth since she and her husband,} Immediately after the review Prince Philip, arrived herejeight training planes of the |Thursday to start an 11-day tour|young Ghana air force swooped of Ghana which was given inde-|low over the parade ground in pendence by Britain four years) saute. Sub Collides |With Trawler * The Queen, wearing a pale- gin al aaiee aoe oe OSLO (Reuiers) -- A Norwe-|peach silk faille dress with a hitch-hiked to seats and strate- gian trawler which reported|small V-neckline and a turban'gic spots round the square and colliding with an unidentified! of orange tulle, drove around along the one-mile route bring- submarine in the Arctic waters|the parade ground standing in a /98 the Queen and Philip to the world-wide criticism of his goy-|Of the Barents Sea during the/specially-designed army vehicle 5dare from Christianborg Cas- ernment's policies Thurs-|night headed for her home port/accompanied by Nkrumah. tle where they had spent the special political committee that|day, termed. Ghana's President) of Hammer today. Her husband followed in a sec-| night. : : his country would not support|Kwame Nkrumah a virtual dic-| A Norv naval spo °s | Sombre-faced chiefs in cere- trade: and diplomatic sanctions|tator and said Liberia emerged|man announced the collision in /monial robes with minions hold- against South Africa as urged|only recently from slavery con-| the early hours of this morning. ling multi-colored umbrellas to by some 30 countries. ditions. He accused some coun-|It appeared the mysterious sub- shield them from the sun lined He spoke as South Africa's fu-| tries of trying to incite civil war|marine and the 364-ton trawler the route to the square along pn ghey 0 ferae en in South Africa. + roel escaped without serious crucial test after Foreign Minis- MARE. iar Bre Laur Ths "ae ORFOSE NEUTRAL ZONE the ininan occured in intr fended the republic's racial pol- : - te. "i/national waters some 30 miles reer - the UN's main political commit-| je 4p ahaast pa parla poe Dat Paral ll tee where the United States and the Norwegian aa the ritain opposed an African pro- ore aration). ,,| posal that the UN declare Africa -- a hgipeet igoeong is the Tremblay expressed Canada's) 9 denuciearized neutral zone. |yorweese Riord trom the north, denunciation of apartheid and Anglo - American spokesmen| eon jor ries hati ° pledged support for a resolution} said the idea would be meaning-| "°° ern corner of the Soviet Un- whch urges al countries 10 CON legs as long as the Soviet Un ' see peyton did not agree to a nuclear perc rise Africa's white] treaty that could be policed. Tremblay--as British and Am- erican delegates said earlier-- asserted it would be a mistake to isolate South Africa. This 'De Gaulle May might well result only in wor) . | | sening the conditions of the non-| Plan To Retire whose _ identification markings| white population of that country.) -- he could not see in the dark,| Louw says the UN will con-| MARSEILLE France (AP)--| followed his ship for a while and} demn itself to slow death if it/President Charles de Gaulle|then disappeared in the dark-| expels South Africa. |said today he may retire from|ness. | Ghana, one of South Africa's|%fice after the Algerian issue|---- harshest critics, says South Af.|iS settled, sources who attended rica wouldn't leave the UN even| Closed meeting with him re "if it was dragged by the nose."/Ported. This, in capsule summary,| The touring French president was the burden of Thursday's|met with city officials of this debate in the 103-member UN i. port pied -- -_ speci itical committee as al"lle reception from _rightists, : : " : ge a foyer 8 against|Who shouted "Algeria peste Rigen - ; snaine ye ag of fallout shel Mir tae, ae be ae anes . Ma anatien oF ita ont. rene" anyons ay, the final stage/ers, : J ae : a pHa dys ause of its po rae el eel 8 "Just. as insurance on homes - -- hid eo a Canada was one of severalmayor and members of the city| he, Santa Monica mountains. |and automobiles is taken out, a ae personal and family plans countries scheduled to speak to-|parliament, de Gaulle was re-|,, %ey kept dousing flareups|hoping that the event against)? " 7 : : ; ins i for a war emergency should be -|ported to have expressed hope throughout the night, hoping to|which we insure will not take) gency avoid a renewal of southern|place, so too in view of the| considered," he added. the seven - year Algerian na-!q.); ta? : ' it i | "In any case, you might prop- . y' Jalif ' ' jworld situation it is only pru-| y Casey y' pies a tionalist rebellion would be set- ggg pal Mr en lov as al' to ilevelop peces-|#tl8 determine to provide some | $215,000 -+ STEAMY BUSINESS the air tonight. It sprayed the surrounding area with mud of a building at New York's | and Silt sucked up from 43rd Street and Avenue of | beneath the street with tre- the Americas as it rears into | mendous pressure. Emer- gency crews sealed off the main in less than an hour. No one was hurt --(AP Wirephoto) A geyser from a broken 16 inch steam pipe blots out part Canada Rejects Expulsion Move UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- Canada today rejected a move for the expulsion of South Africa from the United Nations. Canadian delegate Paul Trem- blay also told the 103-member | Waidantified day in the committee before it voted on rival resolutions re- garding South Africa. Louw, whiie counter-attacking ian Warsaw Pact Meet Starts Next Week WARSAW' (AP) -- Reliable/cra's free-wheeling, Polish sourc¥s said today lead-\ing entrepreneurs. ers of the Warsaw Pact nations} At the square, the Ghana Cay- will meet here next week with|alry Squadron, brilliant in cere- expulsion of Albania from the|monial uniform and carrying Communist alliance the top item|red and white pennants, was on the agenda |mustered in the four corners. Exnected to attend the meet-| The square was the scene of jing are first secretaries of the|bomb blasts last Saturday which 3 : |Soviet bloc Communist parties--/stirred fears for the Queen's A spokesman for the Norwe-|including Premier Khrushchev'safety during the tour nd ie cele submarine was oper|--2nd top Warsaw Pact military | ra's ed the- possibility that it ating in the area and the navy|20¥!S€rs- might be cancelled, had no reports of other subma-) jrines likely to be in the area,| Reports from the skipper of} the: Rairo said the submarine, Canada Will Be - Battleground: PM. | OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- jter Diefenbaker said Thursday \night "war is not as improbable He asked that after the sirens sound in major centres next | Monday citizens turn on their as we hope" and if it comes|radios to receive information Canada will be a battleground. |and instruction about civil de- Calling on Canadians to take| fence. +. | CONSIDER OWN SAFETY Santa Monica Fire In Final Stages LOS ANGELES (AP)--A hun-| 4 ri dred men, hollow-eyed and foot-|self - help measures, including of a five-day fire disaster in| tled "in one manner or an- dine i .|protection against radioactive other" within six months. ise uae "sat ee 1 dil Pls ag pas fallout by means of a shelter." "I am nearing the end of my|were still plagued by "hot| The Prime Minister made his|, Jf war came, many lives could road," the 70-year-pld president! snots'--sparks flying out of|remarks in a national television) be. saved by having prepa- was quoted as telling the offi-|smoldering stumps and flaring|address dealing with Exercise| rations made for survival. ciais "Afterward (when the/into flames The 5,750-acre fire|Tocsin 1961-B, the test of-emer-| Most Canadians, in fact, had | Algerian question is settled) Ijin nearby Bel-Air was con-|gency procedures scheduled for|a chance for survival if they -- retire 'trolled Wednesday night. next Monday and Tuesday. |made advance plans. Mr. Die- - listeria tai dain ertarsianctiereerice es é ------ ----|fenbaker urged parents to ex- |plain this situation to their chil- | ren. "] regret that this exercise has become necessary," he added Canada was working in- tensively for peace but in the : Sharp Red Reversal In Berlin Proposal -- ities succeed, Hoodlums May Be Pushed $200,000 $175,000 | MOSCOW (Reuters) -- West-jtween Communist East Ger-| An early assessment of the jern officials today sifted)many and Russia under which |plan indicates it has removed| jthrough a new surprise Russian|East Germany undertakes to|some of the West's basic objec-| plan on Germany that has/respect the new status of Westitions to the previous Russian| brought a dramatic twist to the' Berlin. |stand oh the German issue. | jcrisis over Berlin. 3. Acceptance of the agree-| One main objection has been| | The four - point plan, dis-/ment by the three Western|Russia's insistence on giving jclosed Thursday night by au-\powers and West Germany|priority to a peace treaty with Into Canada |thoritative sources here, offered/aiong with respect for the sov-|Communist East Germany in | Russian guarantees for the free-|ereignty of East Germany. jany German settlement. WASHINGTON (CP) ea of West Berlin--the central 4. Codblosion "ot « Germin| in|spokes for the U.S. justice inane of tha Geawiout Crate. as 7e n} At the start of the Berlin|spokesman for . Justi .. |peace treaty. crisis earlier this year, Khrush-|department says the tightening The guarantees and other So-| : lchey threatened to sign thejup of anti-crime laws here may viet concessions in the plan|/BERLIN COMES FIRST peace treaty by Dec. 31, but he|possibly push a lot of U.S. hood- were considered a sharp rever-| The first point provides for an|dropped the deadline last|lums into Canada. : = Russia's tough stand onjagreement on West Berlin be-|month. "'As they are hampered in the "The: fou tela the' palomaes teeny. |, ee ok neta nnn ond alent ee ae i y. i .|increas ir $ Ss were reported to have called) Up to now the Soviet position it would turnover control of ac-|) order," the spokesman said tor has always been to'sign a peace | "ess rights to West Berlin to hursday, "but there is very 1. An agreement between|treaty with East Germany and|the East German regime--|close co-operation between the Berlin's four occupying powers|to settle the West Berlin prob-jwhich the West does not recog-|justice departments in the two --the United States, Britain, {lem on that basis. jnize. jcountries and between the France and Russia--on a neW| The new Soviet plan is un-| This threatened action was|RCMP and the FBI. status for West Berlin which|derstood to have been passed|considered by the West as an| "Canadian authorities are guarantees the freedom of its|to the West in an informal way,|attempt to force allied govern-|very alert to the problem. We inhabitants and the freedom of|and so far nothing has been put|ments te deal with the Eastlassist in providing informatior $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 with '"'matket mammies," Ac-| free-speak-| A President Kwame Nkrumah which was damaged in the bomb blasts was decked today with a white smock to concea) the dam- age to its feet. Following the parade, the Queen and her husband ar- ranged a "national parade of |welcome" in the square by chil- dren and voluntary organiza- tions. } The Ghana government was | giving them a dinner in the eve- ning. Ghana Throngs Cheer! Queen During Parade life-size statue of Ghana 7m DR. KWAM Gambling Report Reaches Roberts TORONTO (CP) --A detailediday Commissioner Har-| vison said United States crime syndivates are moving inte Can- ada. They were already active "in the field of gambling, nar- cotics, counterfeiting and in the report on gambling in Ontario |was in the hands of Attorney- |General Kelso Roberts today. | The report was prepared by Prof. Desmond Morton of the Osgoode Hall law school at the request of the attorney-general and presented to the depart- ment Thursday. Mr. Roberts said today he has comment on it for the present. The report would be submitted to Premier Robarts for further study. This additional study would determine whether any government announcement is to be made on the findings. Prof. Morton handed over his report at a two-hour meeting in the attorney-general's office. Mr Roberts asked Professor Morton to study crime in Onta- rio last July 5 after published reports indicated that crime syndicates were operating in the province. TOP POLICE MEET While the Morton report was ppresented here, Commissioner W. H. Clark of the Ontario Pro- vincial Police was discussing crime syndicates with RCMP Commissioner C. W. Harvison in Ottawa. In a speech in Toronto Mon- 'not yet had time to read through the report and' will have no protection racket." jtario. --in the sense that it wouldn' be known and watched," said. "'These things are difficul police authorities." Inspector Jack Hatch, ince. "at its lowest ebb" since a crackdown on clubs three years ago. He was replying to com- ments on the extent of gambling made by Rey. James Mutchmor secretary of the United Church of Canada's board of evangelism and social services, at a clergy- social workers conference there. | | Cited By Mayors OTTAWA (CP)--The national survival program will fail un- less the federal government helps to finance community fall- out shelters; Canadian munici- palities said today in a brief to the cabinet. "The cost of carrying out a national program of fallout shel- ter construction will be enor- mous but the cost of not doing so may be completely disas- trous,"' said the Canadian Fed- eration of Mayors and Munici- palities. Many private home - owners have neither the space nor the money to build basement shel- ters, the brief said. Many Cana- dians lived in flats or apart- ments. The present federal plan- ning made no provision for these people. Therefore, shelters clearly had basis. Britain did this during the Second World War and it seemed "inescapable"' that Can- Federal Aid Need NKRUMAH Mr. Roberts in an interview denied he had ever said there was no organized crime in On- "I have maintained that there is nothing ihat is not contained he to prove but if enough evidence is gathered to bring them be- fore the courts, they will be hrought before the courts .. . "There's nobody running wild here without the knowledge of The OPP this week assigned newly appointed head of the anti-gam- bling squad, to investigate or- ganized gambljing in the prov- In Hamilton Police Chief Leo- nard Lawrence said gambling is TANGIER, Morocco (Reut- ers -- Six opponents of Portu- guese Premier Antonio Salazar sought political asylum here to- day after they commandeered a Portuguese airliner and dropped over Lisbon leaflets signed by exiled rebel Henrique Galvao. Galvao, who hijacked the Por- tuguese ocean liner Santa Maria at sea last January, was at Tan- gier airport when the plane was forced to land here after its leaf- let run. LISBON (AP) -- Two men seized a Portuguese airline plane today and dropped pam- phiets over Lisbon declaring "'we are now at war' with the regime of Premier Antonio de Oliveria Salazar. The pamphlets were signed |'"'Henrique Galvao," the hi- jjacker of the Portuguese liner |Santa Maria Officials of the Portuguese airline, TAP, said the plane carried 18 passengers and seven crew members including two hostesses. Aviation sources said the | " from Casablanca Tangier in Morocco. t t drawn, had made a free election im- party, the National Union, re- plied that the opposition was Communist-infiltrated. The pamphiets, headed "Por- tuguese Anti-totalitarian Front," were addressed to "the men and women of Portugal" and to "'stu- dents. youth, military men who came out of the ranks of the people to whom they belong, and to the workers that live without freedom or bread." armed men forced the crew of the four-engined Constellation to fly over Lisbon and drop pam- phiets, instead of landing on its r flight Gre feist teat eae oh The dramatic flight was staged only two days before Sunday's parliamentary election --an election in which all oppo- sition candidates have with- charging that Salazar possible. Salazar's government 'NOW AT WAR' "We are now at war against the New-State regime of Sala- zar,"' the manifesto said. "For our part we are ready to do any- thing -- as you have already seen. Help us and we will make you free again." REBELS SEEK ASYLUM AFTER PLANE HIJACK 'War' Declared With Salazar It urged the people to "tear up the ballots on Sunday and have no fear. The police can arrest a hundred or even a thousand but they cannot arrest ten thousand." Galvao, from his exile in Bra- zil and with the aid of a revo- lutionary band, seized the liner Santa Maria last January as a symbol of opposition to the gov- ernment, Several hundred pas- sengers eventually were freed when the ship put into port at Recife, Brazil. Gen. Humberto Delgado, a former opposition candidate for president who was associated with Galvao in the exploit, has since called the ship pirate an exhibitionist who damaged the cause of Portuguese freedom. Delgado said in Casablanca two weeks ago that he no longer wanted anything to do with Gal- vao and had 'broken all per- sonal and political connection with him." The plane left Casablanca at 10:50 a.m., and should have landed in Lisbon at noon. In- stead, it flew over Lisbon, dropped the manifestos, and re- turned to Tangier. The Lisbon control tower got ia. Se yo oe pisses as it over replied "we are not $500,000 Blaze In North Bay Business Block NORTH BAY (CP) -- A two- storey downtown hotel and an adjoining business .block were destroyed early today by a fire which caused damage estimated at $500,000, The fire raged out of control for more than six hours in the Merlin Hotel. It also burned out an adjoining two-storey building containing an auty body shop and a ladies wear store. Fire officials said all occu- pants of the hotel were safely evacuated. Two firemen were taken to hospital with injuries, Fireman Edward Duchesne was treated for facial burns but returned to fight the blaze. These underground commu- nity shelters could be built in parks, playgrounds, school yards and other public places. The ownership should be vested with the municipalities and should be exempt from all taxes. In some cases the shel- ters could be used for other community purposes. The brief added that in densely-populated downtown areas--and perhaps elsewhere-- Ottawa should finance the build- ing of municipal underground parking garages that could be used as fallout shelters. Ottawa survey and alter, if necessary, all public buildings that might | to be built on a community) be used as shelters. Private Pilot Arrives Safely | SUDBURY (CP)--Private pi- ada will have to have a similar|lot Sidney McMurray of Toronto,} \policy, if Ottawa considers fall-|9bJect of an air search since he out shelters necessary. jleft here Thuysd y, landed) Safely early today on nearby WOULD FORGO TAXES Lake Ramsay. ; The municipalities said that if} McMurray took off from the a national policy along this line|lake Thursday afternoon head-'¢ were adopted, they would be|ing for Sault Ste, Marie, On willing to forgo increased tax|/He was alone in his single-en assessments on basement shel-/ gine amphibious Cessna 180. j ters built by homeowners who| Three RCAF rescue planes) have the money and room to dojand a U.S. helicopter searched! it. the north channel of Lake Huron} But this still would leave|after a Manitoulin Island radio), many community shelters to be|station picked u> distress sig-) built by the federal government, /nal from the Cessna. 'n co-operation with the prov-) McMurray said today he ran inces and municipalities, injinto bad weather about half-wav| This Atlas missile, carrying areas where residents could not)between Sudbury and the Sault) a monkey named Goliath, ex- MISSILE EXPLODES today. The nose cone can be seen at the lower | hand Start communications with the Wes down on paper, the sources here|German regixge and hence rec-|to identify and follow the move-]be expected to build their own|apd put down on May Lake, 10 ploded shortly corner still intact. 2. A separate agreement said. ognize it. iments of known hoods." shelters. |mifies east of Elliot Lake. after it was launched at Cape Canaveral --AP Wirephote

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